Dublin 2
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Dublin 2, also rendered as D2 and D02, is a historic postal district on the
southside Southside or South Side may refer to: Places Australia * Southside, Queensland, a semi-rural locality in the Gympie Region Canada * South Side, Newfoundland and Labrador, a community in the St. George's Bay area on the southwest coast of Newf ...
of
Dublin Dublin (; , or ) is the capital and largest city of Ireland. On a bay at the mouth of the River Liffey, it is in the province of Leinster, bordered on the south by the Dublin Mountains, a part of the Wicklow Mountains range. At the 2016 c ...
, Ireland. In the 1960s, this central district became a focus for office development. More recently, it became a focus for urban residential development. The district saw some of the heaviest fighting during Ireland's Easter Rising.


Area profile

Dublin 2 lies entirely within the Dublin Bay South constituency of the Irish parliament, the Dáil. The postcode consists of most of the southern city centre and its outer edges. It is the most affluent of the four postcodes that make up the bulk of inner city Dublin. The others being D1, D7, and D8. It is also among the most affluent of all 22 traditional Dublin postal districts and is one of the most affluent in the country.


Notable places

D2 includes Merrion Square, Trinity College, Temple Bar,
Grafton Street Grafton Street () is one of the two principal shopping streets in Dublin city centre (the other being Henry Street). It runs from St Stephen's Green in the south (at the highest point of the street) to College Green in the north (the lowes ...
,
St Stephen's Green St Stephen's Green () is a garden square and public park located in the city centre of Dublin, Ireland. The current landscape of the park was designed by William Sheppard. It was officially re-opened to the public on Tuesday, 27 July 1880 by ...
,
Dame Street Dame Street (; ) is a large thoroughfare in Dublin, Ireland. History The street takes its name from a dam built across the River Poddle to provide water power for milling. First appears in records under this name around 1610 but in the 14th ...
, and
Leeson Street __NOTOC__ Leeson Street (; ) is a thoroughfare near central Dublin, Ireland. Location The street is divided into two parts by the Grand Canal: Lower Leeson Street, in Dublin 2 is to the north of the canal, linking to St Stephen's Green, with ...
. It is home to several government departments and addresses such as Leinster House, Government Buildings, and the Mansion House.


Usage in Dublin addresses

Colloquially, Dubliners simply refer to the area as "Dublin 2". The postal district forms the first part of numerous seven digit Eircodes that are unique to every single address in the area. For addressing purposes, it appears in both its original form as Dublin 2 and as the first part of a seven digit postal code as D02 a line below. For example: Dublin City Council Lord Mayor's Office Mansion House Dawson Street Dublin 2 D02 AF30


General Letter Office for Ireland

Ireland's main
post office A post office is a public facility and a retailer that provides mail services, such as accepting letters and parcels, providing post office boxes, and selling postage stamps, packaging, and stationery. Post offices may offer additional ser ...
was centered in the current postal district, Dublin 2, for over 100 years. In the seventeenth century the post office's letter office had followed the commercial centre of the city from the Dublin Castle area further west to a building in
High Street High Street is a common street name for the primary business street of a city, town, or village, especially in the United Kingdom and Commonwealth. It implies that it is the focal point for business, especially shopping. It is also a metonym fo ...
backing onto Back Lane in 1668 and then to Fishamble Street, on the western border of Dublin 2 during the reign of Charles II. Around 1709 the letter office had moved closer to College Green, to Sycamore Alley, parallel to Crane Lane, known as ''Old Post-Office Yards''. For 21 years, 1755 until 1771, Bardin's Chocolate House in Fownes' Court was rented along with other buildings on the site where the Central Bank of Ireland was located between 1979 and 2017 and is now Central Plaza. The move to the heart of Dublin 2 in College Green, opposite the Irish Parliament House that became the Bank of Ireland in 1803, took place in 1771 but proved to be too small for the expanding mail demands even with renting more buildings in Suffolk Street over time. The cost of ground rent and rent were so high that, in 1810, the Post Office bought the College Green buildings. The following year it was decided to move to Upper Sackville Street claiming they needed more space and the cost of buying all the Suffolk Street property, demolish and rebuild appropriately with the College Green building would cost about £34,000. Other reasons were cited to move and build the first purpose built post office in Ireland were that, all
mail coaches A mail coach is a stagecoach that is used to deliver mail. In Great Britain, Ireland, and Australia, they were built to a General Post Office-approved design operated by an independent contractor to carry long-distance mail for the Post Office. M ...
travelled out of Dublin on the north side of the Liffey except for the
Wicklow Wicklow ( ; ga, Cill Mhantáin , meaning 'church of the toothless one'; non, Víkingaló) is the county town of County Wicklow in Ireland. It is located south of Dublin on the east coast of the island. According to the 2016 census, it has a ...
mail coach and needed more space than College Green, and it also would be more convenient to deliver mail to directors and officials at their homes because many lived north of the river. The opening of the Francis Johnston designed GPO, at a cost of £50,000, on 6 January 1818, saw the end of an era of the Dublin 2 area as the post office's 100 plus years in the area. Alongside, but entirely separate from the General Post Office, from September 1773 there existed a local penny post system that was authorised by the Postage Act 1765 (5 Geo 3 c.25). Known as the Dublin Penny Post, six sub-post offices, out of a total of eighteen initial locations, often in grocers and booksellers and called receiving houses, were set up in the future Dublin 2 area at: Anne Street, Castle Street, Clare Street, Cuff Street, Ship Street and George's Quay. The mail collected was brought to an office in the courtyard of the General Post Office for local delivery, or for forwarding outside the penny post area. Even though the General Post Office had moved away, many penny post receiving houses had been opened and when the penny post was absorbed into the general postal system in 1831 around 30 locations had been opened, and some closed. Those that remained would be sub-post offices. Within a few years of the establishment of the state, the 1929-30 Post Office Guide lists the following Dublin City offices within the area: Pearse Street Sorting Office was opened in 1925 as the country's primary mail sorting location, situated on the corner of Pearse Street and Sandwich Street it was in an old distillery building. Staff complained about the work conditions there over its 42-year use, because of space constraints, the roof leaking tar in summer and rain in winter on workers below, paper dust, etc., such that the subject was raised in Dáil Éireann on a number of occasions. The sorting office had direct access to Westland Row station where trains departed to connect with the
Dun Laoghaire A dun is an ancient or medieval fort. In Ireland and Britain it is mainly a kind of hillfort and also a kind of Atlantic roundhouse. Etymology The term comes from Irish ''dún'' or Scottish Gaelic ''dùn'' (meaning "fort"), and is cognate ...
to Holyhead
mail boat Mail boats or postal boats are a boat or ship used for the delivery of mail and sometimes transportation of goods, people and vehicles in communities where bodies of water commonly separate or separated settlements, towns or cities often where b ...
for onward transmission to Great Britain and foreign destinations. It was eventually closed in August 1967 when a new sorting office opened in
Sheriff Street Sheriff Street (), known by locals as "Sheriffer" or "The Street", is a street in the north inner city of Dublin, Ireland, lying between East Wall and North Wall and often considered to be part of the North Wall area. It is divided into Sherif ...
with access to
Connolly station Connolly station ( ga, Stáisiún Uí Chonghaile) or Dublin Connolly is one of the busiest railway stations in Dublin and Ireland, and is a focal point in the Irish route network. On the North side of the River Liffey, it provides InterCi ...
. That facility was closed in 1994 and a new Dublin Service Unit opened on 17 February 1994 in Cardiff Lane, in the Dublin 2 section of the Dublin Docklands redevelopment. This operated until 2017 when its functions were removed from Dublin 2. The building was demolished and a new 28,000 sq meter commercial development called The Sorting Office was built. Five years after the establishment of the state, in 1927, the
Department of Posts and Telegraphs The Minister for Posts and Telegraphs ( ga, Aire Poist agus Telegrafa) was the holder of a position in the Government of Ireland (and, earlier, in the Executive Council of the Irish Free State). From 1924 until 1984 – when it was abolished †...
initiated a scheme that requested senders to add a code to each address in Dublin City and suburbs. When addressed in English the letter C with an appropriate number denoted the postman's walk where the letters were to be delivered, such as, College Green was C1 while Grafton Street was C3. The scheme was not popular and became defunct. The Dublin postal districts number were introduced in 1961 as "Dublin 2" in this south city area. A dedicated post office was built in St Andrew's Street in 1948 to replace the one in Church Lane. Designed by the Office of Public Works architects Sidney Maskell and John Fox as a Branch Office, it is one of Dublin's busiest post offices. It is a seven-bay four-storey building with granite cladding and extensive windows with strong horizontal features had been influenced by
modernist architecture Modern architecture, or modernist architecture, was an architectural movement or architectural style based upon new and innovative technologies of construction, particularly the use of glass, steel, and reinforced concrete; the idea that form ...
. It is listed as a protected structure and was sold in 2022 for €9.5 million and under a 25-year lease An Post have retained the ground floor and part of the basement.


Gallery

File:Dublin S Trinity College (66055979).jpeg, alt=, The campus of
Trinity College Dublin , name_Latin = Collegium Sanctae et Individuae Trinitatis Reginae Elizabethae juxta Dublin , motto = ''Perpetuis futuris temporibus duraturam'' (Latin) , motto_lang = la , motto_English = It will last i ...
File:South William Street D02.jpg, alt=, Cafes along South William Street. File:The Lafayette Building, D2.jpg, alt=, The Lafayette Building File:20130810 dublin041.JPG, alt=, Merrion Square Park, Merrion Square. File:Baggot Street Lower.jpg, alt=, Lower
Baggot Street Baggot Street () is a street in Dublin, Ireland. Location The street runs from Merrion Row (near St. Stephen's Green) to the northwestern end of Pembroke Road. It crosses the Grand Canal near Haddington Road. It is divided into two sections: ...
. File:Grafton Street - geograph.org.uk - 1410307.jpg, alt=,
Grafton Street Grafton Street () is one of the two principal shopping streets in Dublin city centre (the other being Henry Street). It runs from St Stephen's Green in the south (at the highest point of the street) to College Green in the north (the lowes ...


See also

*
List of Dublin postal districts Dublin postal districts have been used by Ireland's postal service, known as ''An Post'', to sort mail in Dublin. The system is similar to that used in cities in Europe and North America until they adopted national postal code systems in the 19 ...
*
List of Eircode routing areas in Ireland The list of Eircode routing key areas in Ireland is a tabulation of the routing key areas used by An Post and other mail delivery services for the purposes of directing mail within Ireland. A routing key area "defines a principal post town" accord ...
*
List of postal codes This list shows an overview of postal code notation schemes for all countries that have postal or ZIP Code systems. List ; Legend * A = letter * N = number * ? = letter or number * CC = ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code }) formally. The f ...


References

{{Reflist Places in Dublin (city) Postal districts of Dublin